Intel has shipped its first line of solid-state hard drives for notebooks and
PCs.
The new line includes an 80GB drive in 1.8in and 2.5in versions dubbed the
X18-M and X25-M respectively. The company hopes to add a 160GB model to the line
later this year.
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Intel plans to sell both models to PC manufacturers in quantities of up to
1,000 at a price tag of $595 per drive.
The company expects the first models equipped with the SSDs to hit the market
within the next few weeks.
HP already plans to offer the drives in its notebook line-up starting in
October.
Intel also provided an update on the line of server SSDs
announced
at IDF. The X25-E Extreme drives should ship to system vendors within the
next 90 days.
That drive will sport a 32GB capacity and is aimed at high-performance server
applications that demand the fast access times afforded by the solid-state
systems.
Intel estimates that its SSDs run nine times faster than platter-based hard
drives and require less power and space.
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